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TERRORISM: The Wiretap Flap Continues
By Bruce Berkowitz
Technology and terrorism have changed. Laws on intercepts need to
change, too. By Bruce Berkowitz.
One quirk of modern telecommunications is that a message from, say,
Peshawar, Pakistan, to Beirut, Lebanon, might easily travel over a fiberoptic
cable that passes through the United States. That, in essence, is the
reason for the recent flap between Congress and the White House over foreign
surveillance “wiretaps.”
American law has always assumed that most domestic communications
are protected by the Constitution, but that foreigners communicating
abroad are not, and are fair game for U.S intelligence. Such intelligence is
critical today to monitor terrorists and proliferators of weapons of mass
destruction.
The problem is that our laws were not designed for today’s technology.
Until about 10 years ago most international communications traveled
by satellite, and intelligence services could snatch them out of the
air. Now this traffic is carried over a highly interconnected fiber-optic
network.
This network extends over most of the globe, but much of it is concentrated
in the United States. Messages travel at the speed of light, so distance
matters little. They use whichever path has available capacity; thus a lot of
global traffic goes through links operated by American companies inside
U.S. territory.
When is a warrant necessary for a wiretap?
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That fact raises a question that is at the core of the controversy over
what constitutes a “domestic” communication. At least one judge interprets
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA, the law that regulates
such intercepts) to mean that any message traveling over a cable
on American soil is a domestic communication—even when it is from
one foreigner to another foreigner and both are on the other side of the
world.
Under this reasoning, tapping the link requires a warrant. Taken to its
logical conclusion, because all telecommunications on the global network
can potentially pass through U.S. territory, all intercepts on the global network
might require a court order. At a minimum, any message collected
off the Internet in the United States would require one.
The paperwork would be enormous, which is why the program was temporarily
shut down. The Bush administration and Congress agreed in
August to allow it to proceed under the old understanding for another six
months while working out a solution.
Some members of Congress have refused to pass a law to permit foreign
intercepts unless the law included near-perfect privacy guarantees for
every innocent American.
The fact that Mike McConnell, director of national intelligence, has
described the program so candidly reveals what is at stake. He has been
willing to discuss many of the details of what we have been doing so
that everyone can understand why we need to keep doing it.
(McConnell also served as head of the National Security Agency, which
is responsible for collecting most foreign intercepts—“signals intelligence,”
or SIGINT.)
The Bush administration must accept part of the blame for the controversy.
It initially tried to assert the power of the president, arguing that it
could simply declare that these communications were foreign intelligence
and bypass the courts entirely. It was trying to make a philosophical point
when it should have been trying to preserve activities that have endured for
three decades precisely because they enjoyed the support of a broad consensus.
But Congress gets part of the blame, too. Even when it understood the
huge loss in intelligence that had occurred, some of its members refused to
pass a law that would permit these foreign intercepts unless it included
near-perfect written guarantees that no innocent American would ever have
his or her privacy violated.
In any case, the best thing now is for everyone to focus on the task at
hand, which is to pass a law that does what we all want: ensure that U.S.
intelligence can monitor foreign threats and prevent the gross abuses that
often occurred before FISA was passed in 1978. The legislation would be
a minor modification of current law and would look like this:
First, U.S. intelligence should be able to target any foreign national outside
the United States. It should not matter where the message actually travels,
what the technology is, or where it is collected. That is the biggest
change that is needed.
Second, all U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents should be protected.
If an intelligence agency wants to target a citizen or permanent resident,
it should be required to get a court order. If an intelligence analyst
happens to discover information about a U.S. citizen or resident who has not
been targeted, that information should be documented and sequestered—
“minimized,” to use the legal vernacular. That’s the current rule, and by most
accounts it has worked.
Third, companies that cooperate with U.S. intelligence to intercept communications
from foreign targets should be immune from lawsuits. If a
company acts at the request of an authorized U.S. official, and can show
that it made a good-faith effort to comply with prevailing law, it should
not be penalized.
Finally, the law should aim to establish basic principles for the new technological
era, rather than try to identify every specific situation that might
require an intercept or scenario that could lead to abuse. Intelligence officials
know what they require to do their mission, and legislators know how
to write authorizing legislation.
A little accommodation from all quarters would help a lot and rebuild
some much-needed trust. Let’s get on with it.
Wall Street Journal on September 18, 2007. © 2007 Dow Jones & Co. All rights
reserved.
Bruce Berkowitz is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution.
Berkowitz has written several books, including The New Face of War (Free Press, 2003), Calculated Risks (Simon and Schuster, 1987), and American Security (Yale, 1986) and coauthored Best Truth: Intelligence in the Information Age (Yale, 2000), Strategic Intelligence (Princeton, 1989), and The Need to Know: Covert Action and American Democracy, (Twentieth Century, 1992). He is the author of many articles that have appeared in such journals as Foreign Affairs, National Interest, Foreign Policy, and Issues in Science and Technology. He also has published frequently in the pages of the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal.
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